Page 348 - Airpower in 20th Century - Doctrines and Employment
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348                         airpower in 20  Century doCtrines and employment - national experienCes
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               In 1965 and 1966 the Americans embarked on a major bombing campaign of
            North Vietnam that generally followed the Rostow/Bundy strategy. At the same time,
            large American ground combat forces were sent to South Vietnam. The air campaign
            against North Vietnam that was expected to have quick and decisive effects failed
                                                           38
            to cripple the North Vietnamese military capabilities.  However, North Vietnamese
            forces fighting in a low-level war in the south required relatively little in the way
            of logistics. Even a massive interdiction campaign by the U.S. could not stop the
            flow of supplies from North Vietnam to the south. By 1966 the “Rolling Thunder”
            bombing campaign had knocked out 60% of North Vietnam’s oil storage facilities.
            Yet the North Vietnamese quickly adapted their logistics system and dispersed fuel
            throughout the country in 55 gallon drums. Attacks that would have crippled a highly
            industrialized economy or mechanized armed forces had little effect against a low
            tech country and military. 39
               The U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy carried on an intermittent strategic bombing
            campaign against North Vietnam and an interdiction campaign against the supply
            routes along the Ho Chi Minh trail from 1965 until 1973 when the U.S. forces left South
            Vietnam. In many respects, the Vietnam war was an important learning experience
            for the American airpower. The US military employed many new technologies in
            the Vietnam War. Remote electronic sensors were deployed to collect targeting data
            along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Many new aircraft were tested in combat. Laser-guided
            precision bombs saw their debut in bombing North Vietnam. The US Air Force also
            had to contend with highly sophisticated and extensive air defense systems in the
            skies over North Vietnam—and the aircraft losses throughout the whole of the war
            were heavy. Even though American airpower could claim significant tactical victories
            and accomplishments, as in Korea, the war for the Americans ended in a negotiated
            truce and not in anything resembling victory. This allowed for American withdrawal
            and final North Vietnamese victory over South Vietnam two years later. 40

            From the Cold War to Desert Storm

               After the very disappointing experience of Vietnam the U.S. military turned its
            attention to the more serious and immediate question of how to face the vast Soviet
            and Warsaw Pact conventional forces in case of an open confrontation between East
            and West on a European battlefield. In the case of the Cold War turning hot, the United
            States could not count on numerical superiority, or even fighting with air superiority.

            38
                A good overview of the U.S. bombing campaign against North Vietnam is found in Mark Clodfelter,
               The Limits of Air Power: The American Bombing of North Vietnam (New York: The Free Press,
               1989).
            39
                Budiansky, pp. 382-383.
            40
                See Kenneth Werrell, Chasing the Silver Bullet: U.S. Air Force Weapons Development from Vietnam
               to Desert Storm (Washington: Smithsonian Books, 2003) On US aircraft in Vietnam see pp. 9-35; on
               USAF munitions and sensors in Vietnam see pp. 36-54.
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